Conflict

War Seen Up Close

In an essay for la Repubblica, Paolo Pellegrin shares his record of the past two years in Ukraine through a series of images and reflections. Warning: this article includes graphic content.

Paolo Pellegrin

Newly conscripted Ukranian military train in a forest near Ivano Frankvist before being sent to battle. Ukraine. March 2023. © Paolo Pellegrin / Magnum Photos

The profession of conflict photographer grants the burden and privilege of seeing up close the fronts being ignited around the world. I have just returned from the West Bank and will soon return again to Kyiv. There is a strong feeling everywhere that everything is connected and that, one way or another, the cornerstone of tomorrow will be forged in Ukraine.

Military road block. Zaphorizhzhia, Ukraine. 2023.
Ukranian tank fires at Russian positions in the Donetsk Oblast. Ukraine, 2023.
A mass burial site in Izium. The Russian seized Izium in April 2022. When Ukrainian soldiers liberated it in September, they discovered the graves of more than 400 citizens. Ukraine. June 2023.

The impression is that the West has yet to make a full decision on its role. The United States and Europe have done much to support the Ukrainian military, politically, and financially. But a deeper awareness that would shake our society has not yet matured.

This war cannot be lost because it concerns our fate and that of our idea of democracy. If Russia imposes its will on a sovereign country with weapons, and in disregard of any rules, the repercussions will be many and radical.

The funerals of two members of the Azov brigade are held in the courtyard of the Kharkiv regional hospital. Kharkiv, Ukraine. April 2, 2022.
Ukrainian territorial defense operate in the front line. Saltivka neighborhood, Kharkiv, Ukraine. 2022.
A mass grave in the yard of St. Andrew's church in Bucha is believed to contain at least 70 bodies. Bucha, Ukraine. April 5, 2022.
A wounded civilian is treated in a hospital in Chuguiev, a town near Kharkiv. Ukraine. April 1, 2022.
The funeral of Anton Rodovenchyk, an 18-year-old Ukrainian soldier killed near Zhytomiryr. Babyn Village, Ukraine. April 8, 2022.

"News of bombings and battles seem more and more distant, like the echo of a litany to which we have grown accustomed or resigned: their outcome, however, will weigh on our lives. "

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A man with an intellectual disability refuses to leave his home despite the heavy shelling. His parents live in the basement of the building and check on him daily. Saltivka neighborhood, Kharkiv, (...)
A dead man and his neighbor in a building that was shelled by Russian forces. Saltivka neighborhood, Kharkiv, Ukraine. March 22, 2022.
A Ukrainian refugee crosses the border by foot into Medyka, the busiest pedestrian crossing on the Poland-Ukraine border. From there they are bussed to reception centres, where they wait to learn t (...)
At the funeral in Saints Peter and Paul Garrison Church of four Ukrainian soldiers killed in the Russian bombing of a Ukrainian training centre in Yavoriv that killed at least 35 people. Lviv, Ukra (...)
The funerals of two members of the Azov brigade are held in the courtyard of the Kharkiv regional hospital. Ukraine. 2022.

There are splits within Europe and the United States that are not just the result of genuine pacifist instances or electoral campaign calculations. They emerge when party leaders comment on Alexei Navalny’s death in the same breath as the Kremlin, which exhibits an interested reticence. Navalny’s demise, on the other hand, like too many others before him, casts a blinding light on the bloodthirsty power that wanted him dead.

People take a train from Zaporizhzhia towards Lviv after having fled fighting in Mariupol and other besieged areas. Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine. March 23, 2022.
The Barabashovo market after being shelled by Russian forces. Kharkiv, Ukraine. March 20, 2022.
The body of a dead Russian soldier in the newly-liberated village of Moschun in the Kyiv Oblast region. Moschun, Ukraine. April 6, 2022.
A rehabilitation center for Ukranian soldiers suffering from PTSD in the Kharkiv region. Ukraine. June 2023.
Ukrainian Mortar Unit near Kostiantynivka. 2023.
An elderly woman in Lyman. She lives with her family live in a semi destroyed apartment building with no heating. Ukraine. March 11, 2023.

We know that for years the disinformation machine has been working to sow doubt and fear, and to build a distorted image of reality. We have underestimated the effects of this slow corruption in making us lose sight of the meaning of the struggle being fought on the banks of the Dnipro and in the trenches of the Donbass. News of bombings and battles seem more and more distant, like the echo of a litany to which we have grown accustomed or resigned: their outcome, however, will weigh on our lives.

Thirty-five years ago Francis Fukuyama wrote that we had reached the end of History, arguing that after the collapse of the Wall and the crumbling of the USSR, the establishment of liberal democracies in a world of peace was irreversible. That is not what we are witnessing. We are facing a decisive historical moment and an acceleration of crises and conflicts in which many different scenarios are being played out. Ukraine, in my opinion, remains the main one.

A soldier and his girlfriend in a undisclosed location in the Kharkiv Oblast. Traumatized soldiers undergo various types of therapy before going back to the frontline. Ukraine. March 17, 2023.
An elderly woman boards a bus to leave the town of Kostyantynivka, in Donetsk Oblast. Ukraine. 2023.
At the funeral, in Lviv’s Peter and Paul Church, of 4 Ukranian soldiers killed in the Russian bombing of an Ukrainian training centre in Yavoriv that killed at least 35 people. Lviv, Ukraine. March (...)
A WW2 memorial around Kryvyi Rih. Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, Ukraine. 2023.
A WW2 monument at the entrance of the city of Izium. Kharkiv Oblast, Ukraine. 2023.

"From the dawn of the attack they have been united and compact in opposing the invasion. A whole people have shown that resisting is necessary. "

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The village of Afanasiivka in Mykolaiev Oblast was completely flooded after the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam. The destruction of the dam created catastrophic floods in towns and villages in S (...)
A WW2 monument at the entrance of the city of Izium. Kharkiv Oblast, Ukraine. June 2023.
A Russian torture center in a former police station in Izium. Kharkiv Oblast, Ukraine. June 2023.
A Ukrainian military base in Ivano Frankvist. Ukraine. March 3, 2022.
Ukrainian soldiers train in an abandoned building in western Ukraine before being sent to battle. Ukraine. March 2023.
Rehabilitation center for injured soldiers. Lviv Oblast, Ukraine. March 1, 2022.
Funeral, in the St. Peter and Paul Church, of four Ukrainian soldiers killed in the Russian bombing on a military training center in Yavoriv, which killed at least 35 people. Lviv, Ukraine. March 2 (...)

Lenin said, “There are decades when nothing happens and weeks when decades happen.” We are in the midst of such a historical phase and everything appears connected, from the Chinese grip on Taiwan to the Russian missiles on Kyiv to the deadly aggression on Gaza that no one seems to be able to stop. Each fracture in the world order, each thrust imparted by force of arms brings to the forefront the West’s bewilderment and its inability to define a vision to deal with it all. 

The Ukrainians, on the other hand, have known what to do. From the dawn of the attack they have been united and compact in opposing the invasion. A whole people have shown that resisting is necessary. Facing this challenge didn’t begin in 2022, or even in 2014 with the occupation of Crimea and the Russian intervention in the Donbass. They are responding to the century-long threat that Moscow’s imperialism has projected on their identity.

People living in a basement in a village a few kilometers from the front line. Maksymilianivka, Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine. June 2023.
A stabilization center for first treatment of Ukranian soldiers wounded in battle. A few kilometers from the front lines near Vuhledar. Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine. June 2023.
Flooding in the village of Novo Vasilivka in the Mykolaiev oblast after the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam.The destruction of the dam created catastrophic floods in towns and villages in Souther (...)
The village of Afanasiivka in Mykolaiev oblast was completely flooded after the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka dam. The destruction of the dam created catastrophic floods in towns and villages in S (...)
A detention center for Russian prisoners. They wait to be exchanged with Ukranians held by Russia. Lviv Oblast, Ukraine. June 2023.
Destruction at the Antonov International Airport. Hostomel, Kyiv Oblast. Ukraine. June 2023.

 In these two years, I have encountered stories of great self-sacrifice. The luminary from Odesa who left his profession, wife and children to become a surgeon on the front lines, committed to saving men torn apart by bombs. He operated under bullets, without a moment’s respite. I stayed with families locked in cellars in Karkhiv,  the metropolis scourged by a rain of rockets. I saw entire communities kneeling along country roads as the coffin of a young man who had worn the uniform passed by. I followed the strenuous rebirth of veterans, maimed by combat in body or psyche. I entered the rooms where the invaders tortured and killed, trying in vain, to bend the will of a nation.

People kneel on the side of the road as a funeral procession of a fallen soldier passes by. Kulychkiv, Ukraine. May 2023.

"I saw entire communities kneeling along country roads as the coffin of a young man who had worn the uniform passed by."

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A stabilization point of the 37th Marine brigade near the front lines in the Donetsk Oblast. Ukraine. 2023.

"What is the role of photography in the face of all this?"

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A morgue in Kharkiv where the bodies of the Russian missile attack in Groza are kept. On October 5, a Russian missile strike killed over 50 civilians in the small village of Groza in north eastern (...)
Funerals in the cemetary of Groza. On October 5, a Russian missile strike killed over 50 civilians in the small village of Groza in north eastern Ukraine. The crowd had gathered to mourn a soldier (...)
A special forces unit of the Ukranian army in a front line position where they operate armed drones against Russian positions. They are highly succesful at striking Russian targets and this makes t (...)
A special forces unit of the Ukranian army in a front line position where they operate armed drones against Russian positions. They are highly successful at striking Russian targets and this make (...)

What is the role of photography in the face of all this? Images certainly have a relationship with history, they end up becoming part of it and records of things that happened. They form a memory that no revisionism can deny. Photographs, especially those published in the media at large, reach many people and create a dialogue: they pose questions and doubts, giving the reader the elements that they need to form their own thoughts and judgments. 

This essay was originally published in Italian by la Repubblica

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